EU turns northern vision into
reality
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Riga in Latvia is an important transit port as are
many of the leading coastal cities in the Baltic States. |
An enlargement
of the European Union to include Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia
has been on the agenda for some years and the process culminated at
the Copenhagen Summit late last year when the four countries agreed
the final terms of accession. In many ways this was a major milestone
in European development. When the four countries formally join up in
the next couple of years the Baltic Sea will nearly become an EU Mare
Nostrum.
The
integration process will be a long one, but the perspective is altogether
positive, even though cultural and political traditions will present
formidable obstacles. They will be overcome in time. One should never
forget that it is only relatively recently that the European Community
really adopted a policy to include the northern part of Europe. The
EU calls it the Northern Dimension and it includes the current members
in the region, Sweden, Denmark and Finland, the new members, Iceland,
Russia and Norway.
Finland
originally took the initiative at the European Council in Luxembourg
in December 1997, when they asked the Commission to prepare an interim
report on the Northern Dimension for the policies of the Union.
The report was presented in Vienna and in 1999 the European Council
adopted the guidelines for the further EU conduct in the Northern Area.
In
a statement back then the Council said that the Northern Dimension is
conceived as a way of working with the countries of the region to increase
prosperity, strengthen security and resolutely combat dangers such as
environmental pollution, nuclear risks ad cross-border organised crime.
The
statement was designed to give the thinking a bit of populist bite,
as the EU for years has been dominated by countries with a rudimentary
conception of Northern Europe. The enlargement in the Baltics must be
judged on this background.
The Northern Region
The EU concept covers a large geographical area from Iceland in the
west to North West Russia, from the Norwegian, Barents and Kara Seas
in the North to the southern coast of the Baltic Sea. The region has
around 85 million people, of which 24 live in the five Nordic countries,
7.8 million in the Baltic States, 38.6 million in Poland and around
14 million in North West Russia, including Kaliningrad. There are existing
fora inside the Northern Dimension such as the Council for Baltic Sea
States (CBSS), the Barents Euro-Arctic Council (BEAC) and the Arctic
Council, and they will continue their work regardless of the current
enlargement.
It
is true to say that Norway and Iceland is not fully in the EU focus,
even though both countries are now renegotiating their EES agreements.
The enlargement in the Baltics has, no doubt, put more pressure on both
countries to reconsider their stance to remain outside the European
Community.
Public
opinion in both countries is currently in favour of membership, but
the makeup of the current governments makes it difficult to predict
when a new application is likely.
Areas of cooperation
When Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia become EU members a lot of
the current cooperation will be formalised somewhat differently. However,
membership will facilitate cooperation in transport infrastructure,
energy, telecommunications and environmental issues. How these issues
are handled in new members countries will be formulated in their Accession
Agreements. The relations with Russia are already based on the Partnership
and Cooperation Agreement (PCA), which came into force in December 1997.
This agreement is important, as the new member countries in the Baltic
will be bound by it. It covers trade in goods on the basis of MFN treatment
and a range of WTO disciplines.
In
1998 they started to look at possible negotiations to establish a Free
Trade Agreement. It establishes principles for business and investments,
including supply of services, payments, capital movements, legislation
regulating competition and well as economic, cultural and scientific
cooperation. The EU-Russia Cooperation Council manages the framework
of the agreement.
Trans-European networks
A Trans-European transport network has high priority and a great deal
of resources is available to reach this objective. On EU territory the
idea is to develop Trans-European Transport Networks (TEN) and an extension
to the new member states (the TINA network). Plans are also afoot for
Pan-European Transport Corridors and Areas in adjacent countries, including
Russia.
There
are a number of projects, which have benefitted so far. Among these
are Via Baltic, Nordic Triangle (MalmöStockholmTurkuHelsinkiVyborg),
TallinnTarva railway, border crossing infrastructure at Salla,
Rajajooseppi, Imatra-Sveotogorsk and Vaalima, a sea rescue service in
the Baltic Sea, port developments in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania and
in the Port of St Petersburg and a few others.
There
are also feasibility studies for reorganisation of the ports of Murmansk
and Archangelsk. A research project is carried out to develop maritime
transport between Scandinavia and North West Russia/Northern Siberia.
And finally a study has been conducted if the Russian sea-river capacity
with their links to the Trans-European Networks.
A bumpy way forward
The way forward towards more integration will be a bumpy one, and one
fraught with pitfalls. One only has to look at the struggle Germany
has faced after the unification of West and East Germany. It is not
readily comparable to the integration of Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and
Estonia, but the differences in economic development between these countries
and the EU is very tangible.
The
fact that the same countries will become members of NATO could easy
development to some extent. Military cooperation often has spin-offs
into the commercial world. Through the NATO cooperation both Norway
and Iceland are involved, while Sweden and Finland are not members of
NATO.
Opportunities
It would be wrong, however, only to look at the problems ahead. There
are plenty of opportunities, which will benefit all countries involved.
After all, the four countries are members of the European cultural family.
They all share a common heritage and now also a common future.
A
visionary European would say that difficulties are mere technicalities,
because common benefits will prevail in the end. There is also the opportunity
for the European Union to strengthen links to Russia, even if the Baltic
States may want to sever some of the historical ties.
The
Baltic Region includes Russia and it would be folly not to take this
opportunity to seek greater involvement and cooperation. The EU is already
dependent on energy supplies from Russia and plans are in place to extend
these supplies.
Piping
crude oil to Europe, rather than shipping it through the Baltic Sea
makes a lot of sense. Energy cooperation in the Northern/Baltic Region
also includes North West Russia with increased shipments from the Murmansk
area.
Therefore
it is important that this new enlargement with four countries is managed
with the view to include those countries which are not members of the
EU, namely Iceland, Norway and Russia. Everyone will benefit by common
endeavour, as we are all dependent on each other. The result of the
Copenhagen summit was, therefore, an historic opportunity, which must
be cherished, nursed and developed.
//Petter Arentz
Back to SSG 2, 24 January